Comic Relief from Textbooks

The purpose of the graphic novel textbook is to provide a better teaching tool by
making the material interesting and entertaining for students.

Students used to get detention for reading comic books in class. Now a similar format
is being used as a way to engage them in learning.

Jeremy Short, the Jerry S. Rawls Professor of Management in the Rawls College of
Business, has published the first-ever graphic novel textbook on management, which
is just out this summer. The first chapter of “Atlas Black: Managing to Succeed” can be viewed online.

Short co-authored the book with Talya Bauer, the Cameron Professor of Management
at Portland State University, and Dave Ketchen, the Lowder Eminent Scholar in Entrepreneurship
at Auburn University. Both Bauer and Ketchen have previous experience co-authoring
traditional textbooks on management topics and all three co-authors serve as editor
or associate editor at academic journals such as the Academy of Management Journal and the Journal of Management.

Making a Connection through Comics

Short thinks the book, which took about four years to develop, will appeal to college
students. He said the primary goal is to provide a better teaching tool by making
the material interesting and entertaining for students.

“I think that many textbooks in strategic management tend to offer a number of disconnected
examples using different companies that students might not be familiar with,” said
Short. “This can create information overload and I believe it leads to retention
problems. In contrast, the graphic novel uses a fixed set of characters that apply
the material to their story.”

“Atlas Black: Managing to Succeed” is about two college seniors starting their own
restaurant called the No Cover Café. The storyline helps keep the information accessible
and interesting. Short said they were able to inject a lot of humor into Atlas Black,
which breaks up the material and helps students stay focused and engaged.

The reaction to Short’s work has already been very positive, and two more Atlas Black
books are under contract.

Jeremy Short is a professor of management in the Rawls College of Business. View his
expert profile in our online Experts Guide.

“Some colleagues initially find the idea of a comic as an educational tool to be
strange,” Short said. “But after I tell them that the Federal Reserve has been putting
out comics on topics such as monetary policy for years, the 9/11 commission report
was in graphic novel format, that the graphic novel “Maus” won the Pulitzer Prize,
and that many movies were originally graphic novels, they are generally won over
and quickly embrace the idea once they see the finished work.”

Opportunity Knocks

That Atlas Black came to be at all was somewhat a case of Short being in the right
place at the right time.

“I had a student in an MBA class who had worked with Len Simon, the illustrator for
the ‘Atlas Black: Managing to Succeed’ book, who has worked on movies such as Anastasia,
Adam Sandler’s Eight Crazy Nights, Fat Albert and Curious George,” Short said.

“I mentioned to her that someone should do a graphic novel version of a management
textbook and the she suggested that if I was serious she would put me in contact
with Len. So it was definitely a case of following up on that opportunity.”

After that introduction, colleague and co-author Bauer told him about an upstart
publishing company called Flat World Knowledge whose goal was to specialize in low cost textbooks and they were very open to innovative
ideas.

“In addition to really liking their innovative format and their desire to make textbooks
affordable again, they allowed us the creative license that I don’t believe would
have been possible with many of the ‘old school’ publishers,” Short said. “Flat World
Knowledge is making a big push to make textbooks affordable with their open-source
approach. The printed version of Atlas Black, for example, sells for $14.99.”

Holy Harvard Case Study!

Short also boasts the first-ever case study for Harvard Business School’s case collection
in graphic novel format, co-written with Robert Austin. The case, which describes
an information technology security crisis, and raises issues of risk management,
preparation for crises, management of crises, computer security and public disclosure
of security risks, is available at hbsp.harvard.edu.